Francis Xavier was  at the zenith of his fame at the University of Paris, when, in the  early spring of 1528, a poor Spanish scholar, leading an ass laden with  some books and a scanty supply of raiment, travelstained and wearied by  the long journey on foot from Salamanca, entered the French capital and  sought the "Quartier Latin." No longer a young man, and bearing evident  marks of privation and hardship, this stranger re-studied grammar among  the small boys at the College Montaigu; a proceeding which excited no  comment, as elderly men were often seen among the students, as is still  the case in China at the present day. When he had completed his course  of grammar, he began to study philosophy at Sainte-Barbe. This grave  man, with a decided limp — the result of a wound received at the siege  of Pampeluna — having been robbed of his small store of money, was glad  to be lodged as a "poor scholar" in the hospice of St. James, the patron  saint of Spain. He paid the necessary fees for his course out of alms  collected in Belgium and London during the vacations. This poorly clad  student was Ignatius de Loyola, who  had been formerly a noble and brave soldier, and greatly distinguished  for his devotion to king and country, and was even now meditating the  foundation of the Society of Jesus. He could not have been long at the Paris University without  hearing of and seeing his countryman, the brilliant Master of Arts, Francis Xavier, and one would think their first meeting must have been rather dramatic.
Link (here) to the book entitled, A Life of Saint Francis Xavier, S.J. 

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